1936
DOI: 10.1039/jr9360000971
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218. Structure of benzene. Part VIII. Assignment of vibration frequencies of benzene and hexadeuterobenzene

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Cited by 35 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Finally, model phonon frequencies of isotopically substituted crystals generally obey the Redlich-Teller product rule (Angus et al, 1936;Wilson et al, 1955;Chacko et al, 1991) within $1 part in 10 5 , again consistent with average numerical errors of order 0.0001 cm À1 for each phonon frequency.…”
Section: Uncertainty In Estimated Equilibrium Constantsmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Finally, model phonon frequencies of isotopically substituted crystals generally obey the Redlich-Teller product rule (Angus et al, 1936;Wilson et al, 1955;Chacko et al, 1991) within $1 part in 10 5 , again consistent with average numerical errors of order 0.0001 cm À1 for each phonon frequency.…”
Section: Uncertainty In Estimated Equilibrium Constantsmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The last step in Urey's derivation is the application of the Redlich-Teller product rule (e.g., Angus et al 1936;Wilson et al 1955 …”
Section: ( )mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the evaluation of RFPR's from the vibrational frequencies is straightforward, it presents an additional step, which may have discouraged some researchers from pursuing the topic. Since the RFPR approach also relies upon the Teller-Redlich product rule (given in Teller's personal communication to Angus et al (1936); see Wilson, Decius and Cross, 1955 for a more modern derivation and applications) it makes it difficult to separate vibrational, rotational and translational contributions or to separate enthalpic and entropic contributions to the free energy. It is also based on the harmonic oscillator approximation, which may not be adequate in all cases.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%